GemCraft, a free online Strategy game brought to you by Armor Games. Havoc and corruption swarms through the land, and you are one of those few wizards who can put an end to it. Create and combine magic gems, put them into your towers and banish the monsters back to hell!
This guide explains the talisman rune bonuses, which are extremely powerful compared to the individual fragment bonuses, especially at medium wizard levels.
Guide to Talisman Rune Bonuses
Overview
This guide provides an explanation of the talisman rune bonuses. If you would like to figure out the secret of talisman runes by yourself do not go further into this guide!
Talisman Runes
During the way to Spiritforge, we sometimes find talismans with markings on the corners:
There are five kind of runes in total: four are shown in the title icon of this guide, and the fifth one is shown above.
Placing the fragments inside the talisman in a certain manner will activate two very, very powerful hidden bonuses: one grants extra starting mana, and the other one grants extra mana at the start of each wave.
The First Bonus
The first bonus (extra starting mana) concerns the placement of rune fragments in each row.
If a row of talisman contains 3 or more runes of the same kind, the lights at the two ends of this row will lit, indicating that this row will generate a rune bonus '+x% initial mana', where
x = 0.5 * (total rarity of fragments carrying the majority rune) * (1 or 1.2 or 1.4)
The final factor is determined by precisely how many fragments carry the majority rune: 1 if there are exactly 3 runes of the same kind, 1.2 if 4 of the same kind, and 1.4 if all fragments carry the same rune.
If multiple rows satisfies the rune condition, then the contribution is calculated for each row individually and then added together.
Example 1
Although all of the fragments are carrying runes, there are no 3 runes of the same kind (only the 2nd and the 4th fragments share the same rune), and nothing happens.
Example 2
This time we replaced the rightmost fragment so now we have 3 runes of the same kind (on 2nd, 4th and 5th fragment). The two end lights are now lit, indicating a bonus. The rarities of the fragments are 69, 49, 48, 29, 73, and the bonus is calculated as
0.5 * (49 + 29 + 73) = 75.5
And we will get a +76% (rounded) bonus of initial mana. Note how the calculation ignores the fragments that are not carrying the majority rune.
Example 3
We replaced the center fragment so now we have 4 runes of the same kind (2nd to 5th fragment). Again the two end lights are lit. The rarities of the fragments are now 69, 49, 21, 29, 73, and the bonus is calculated as
0.5 * (49 + 21 + 29 + 73) * 1.2 = 103.2
And we will get a +103% (rounded) bonus of initial mana. Again the leftmost fragment does not participate in the calculation as it does not carry the same rune as others.
This bonus is applied to the initial mana after everything else:
mp = (300 + 7 * skill points + bonus from wizard levels) * (1 + x%)
Which means a good combination of fragments in multiple rows can directly boost the initial mp two or three fold. Depending on the strategy, this can either save you some skill points or make your starting gem one grade higher, and is extremely helpful for low wizard levels (i.e. 50-100).
The Second Bonus
The second bonus (extra mana per wave) concerns the placement of rune fragments in each column.
If a column of talisman contains 3 or more runes of different kind, the lights at the two ends of this column will lit, indicating that this column will generate a rune bonus '+x mana at the start of each wave', where
x = (total rarity of fragments carrying runes) * (1 or 1.2 or 1.4)
The final factor is determined by precisely how many kinds of runes there are: 1 if there are exactly 3 kinds of runes, 1.2 if 4 kinds, and 1.4 if all fragments carry completely different runes.
If multiple columns satisfies the rune condition, then the contribution is calculated for each column individually and then added together.
Example 1
Keep in mind that the picture is actually for a column; it is rotated by 90 degrees for reading convenience.
There are only 2 kinds of runes (one from the 1st fragment, and the other from the 3rd, 4th and 5th fragments), and nothing happens(and no, 'no runes' does not count toward a kind of rune). This would have triggered a row bonus if placed in rows (that being said, we can not change which edge a edge fragment can go to).
Example 2
This time we replaced some fragments so now we have 3 kinds of runes (1st and 3rd, 4th, 5th fragment). The two end lights are now lit, indicating a bonus. The rarities of the fragments are 45, 49, 23, 22, 24, and the bonus is calculated as
(45 + 23 + 22 + 24) * 1 = 114
And we will get a +114 bonus mana at the start of each wave. Note how the calculation ignores the fragments that are not carrying runes. Compared to rows, the columns are more efficient at including more fragments in the bonuses; the rows only calculate fragments with the same rune, while the column calculates all fragments with runes, even if they do not contribute to new kinds of runes.
Example 3
We replaced more fragments so now we have all 5 kind of runes. Again the two end lights are lit. The rarities of the fragments are now 45, 80, 48, 22, 24, and the bonus is calculated as
(45 + 80 + 48 + 22 + 24) * 1.4 = 306.6
And we will get a +307 (rounded) bonus mana at the start of each wave.
This bonus is applied to each wave, and the bonus mana is given instantly; linked waves will instead give 2 waves worth of mana. This is in some sense even more powerful than the initial mana bonus. Consider a 50-wave battle with 200 mana bonus per wave. This is equivalent to 10k mana given gradually throughout the battle, and can be used to create a free grade 6 gem. For longer battles the bonus becomes even more powerful, and is extremely helpful even for mid wizard levels (i.e. 100-200).
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GemCraft | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Game In A Bottle |
Publisher(s) | Armor Games (Flash) NTT Resonant Inc. (iOS)[1] |
Platform(s) | Browser, iOS |
Release | June 26, 2008 (original), April 16, 2009 (prequel), February 17, 2011 (Labyrinth), 14 April 2011 (Labyrinth - iOS),[2] April 4, 2014 (Chasing Shadows), January 10, 2020 (Frostborn Wrath) |
Genre(s) | Tower defense, Real-time strategy |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
GemCraft is a series of tower defense created by Hungarian studio Game In A Bottle, in which magical gems are used as the primary means of offense and defense. The first game, titled GemCraft Chapter One: The Forgotten (also known simply as 'GemCraft'), is a tower defenseflash game originally released on June 26, 2008. A prequel, GemCraft Chapter 0: Gem of Eternity, was released on April 16, 2009, and a disconnected chapter, GemCraft Lost Chapter: Labyrinth, was released February 17, 2011. On April 4, 2014 the sequel to the first game GemCraft Chapter Two: Chasing Shadows was released. The original game was released for iOS on April 14, 2011 by NTT Resonant.[1] The next game, GemCraft Lost Chapter: Frostborn Wrath, was released in January 2020.[3]
In GemCraft, players are given gems to combine and place into towers. Different combinations of gems produce different effects, such as splash damage, Damage over time and triple damage. The player's life bar and magic energy are represented by the same statistic - mana. With mana, the player can purchase towers, gems, trenches, traps, and combine gems. A key aspect of strategy in GemCraft is to increase the player's mana gain to high levels, enabling creation of stronger and stronger gems. Combining two gems creates a single gem of higher power, or 'level'. The shape of the gems change with each level (or Grade).[citation needed] Lords of magic cheats.
Plot[edit]
The series is set in a fictional fantasy world and depicts the battles of wizards against a powerful demon known as 'The Forgotten'. Wizards used to regularly summon demons to do their bidding until they brought forth a demon too powerful for them to control, who was also capable of subduing other demons under her command. Described as 'a fully black female torso with disfigured arms, a head with long hair and no face', the Forgotten commands her legions in order to conquer the 'Spiritforge', the last bastion of the wizards, in order to become omnipotent. There is no known way to destroy The Forgotten or to banish her back to the Demon Realm from which she was summoned. Instead, she can be sealed away by a powerful artifact known as the 'Gem of Eternity', but it can only contain her for a few decades before she escapes, and each time she escapes, a new gem must be crafted in order to capture her again.
Reception[edit]
Gamezebo gave the original GemCraft game a rating of 3.5/5.[4] Slide to Play said the game did not distinguish itself from its peers.[5]
Disney, however, does still have the IP for Epic Mickey, but no plans have been announced to continue the series, meaning the chances of another entry are slim. As is the case with many cancelled games, petitions have been made by fans, though none have persuaded Disney to select a new developer.On 30th April 2015, Warren Spector responded to questions regarding the game. Depending on the reception, for the next game he would have been going crazy with the musical songs, with Epic Mickey 3 possibly being a full blown musical. Depending on the timing, the game could have seen a potential release on the next generation's platforms.On January 29th 2013, it was announced that was being closed by Disney.
References[edit]
- ^ ab'Gemcraft, The Crown Jewel of Flash Gaming Arrives on iOS - iPhone News at IGN'. IGN. April 14, 2011. Archived from the original on September 13, 2012.
- ^'GemCraft chapter one: The Forgotten Flash Game'. GameSpot. Retrieved 2011-04-23.
- ^'GemCraft - Frostborn Wrath'. Steam. June 21, 2019. Retrieved June 25, 2019.
- ^'Archived copy'. Archived from the original on 2012-03-24. Retrieved 2011-04-23.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- ^Andrew Webster (April 18, 2011). 'GemCraft Review at Slide To Play'. Slide to Play. Retrieved 2011-04-23.